Method of making a three dimensional perpendicular magnetic tunnel junction with thin-film transistor

ABSTRACT

According to one embodiment, a method of forming a magnetic memory device includes forming a source region including a first semiconductor material having a first conductivity above a substrate, forming an array of three-dimensional (3D) structures above the substrate, depositing a channel material on a surface of at least one sidewall of each 3D structure, depositing a gate dielectric material on the channel material on the surface of at least one sidewall of each 3D structure, forming a first isolation region in the cavity region above the substrate, forming a first gate region above the first isolation region in the cavity region, and forming a second isolation region above the first gate region, wherein a nth gate region is formed above a (n+1) isolation region thereafter until a top of the array of 3D structures, wherein each nth gate region is coupled to each nth perpendicular magnetic tunnel junction sensor of each 3D structure.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to magnetic random access memory (MRAM), and more particularly to three-dimensional perpendicular magnetic tunnel junction with thin film transistor.

BACKGROUND

Magnetic Random Access Memory (MRAM) is a non-volatile data memory technology that stores data using magnetoresistive cells, such as Magnetoresistive Tunnel Junction (MTJ) elements. At their most basic level, such MTJ elements include first and second magnetic layers that are separated by a thin, non-magnetic tunnel barrier layer, which may be constructed of an insulating barrier material, such as MgO, Al₂O₃, etc. The first magnetic layer, which may be referred to as a reference layer, has a magnetization that is fixed in a direction that is perpendicular to that of a plane of the layer. The second magnetic layer has a magnetization that is free to move so that it may be oriented in either of two directions that are both generally perpendicular to the plane of the free magnetic layer. Therefore, the magnetization of the free layer may be either parallel with the magnetization of the reference layer or anti-parallel with the direction of the reference layer (i.e., opposite to the direction of the reference layer).

The electrical resistance through the MTJ element in a direction perpendicular to the planes of the layers changes with the relative orientations of the magnetizations of the magnetic reference layer and magnetic free layer. When the magnetization of the magnetic free layer is oriented in the same direction as the magnetization of the magnetic reference layer, the electrical resistance through the MTJ element is at its lowest electrical resistance state. Conversely, when the magnetization of the magnetic free layer is in a direction that is opposite to that of the magnetic reference layer, the electrical resistance across the MTJ element is at its highest electrical resistance state.

The switching of the MTJ element between high and low resistance states results from electron spin transfer. Each electron has a spin orientation. Generally, electrons flowing through a conductive material have random spin orientations with no net spin orientation. However, when electrons flow through a magnetized layer, the spin orientations of the electrons become aligned so that there is a net aligned orientation of electrons flowing through the magnetic layer, and the orientation of this alignment is dependent on the orientation of the magnetization of the magnetic layer through which they travel. When the orientations of the magnetizations of the free layer and the reference layer are oriented in the same direction, the spin of the electrons in the free layer are generally in the same direction as the orientation of the spin of the electrons in the reference layer. Because these electron spins are generally in the same direction, the electrons may pass relatively easily through the tunnel barrier layer. However, if the orientations of the magnetizations of the free layer and the reference layer are opposite to one another, the spin of electrons in the free layer will generally be opposite to the spin of electrons in the reference layer. In this case, electrons do not easily pass through the barrier layer, resulting in a higher electrical resistance through the MTJ stack.

Because the MTJ element may be switched between low and high electrical resistance states, it may be used as a memory element to store data. For example, the low resistance state may be read as a “1” or one, whereas the high resistance state may be read as a “0” or zero. In addition, because the magnetic orientation of the magnetic free layer remains in its switched state without any electrical power being provided to the element, the memory storage provided by the MTJ element is robust and non-volatile.

To write a bit of data to the MTJ cell, the magnetic orientation of the magnetic free layer is switched from a first direction to a second direction that is 180° from the first direction. This may be accomplished, for example, by applying a current through the MTJ element in a direction that is perpendicular to the planes of the layers of the MTJ element. An electrical current applied in one direction will switch the magnetization of the free layer to a first orientation, whereas an electrical current applied in a second direction will switch the magnetic of the free layer to a second, opposite orientation.

Once the magnetization of the free layer has been switched by the current, the state of the MTJ element may be read by detecting a voltage across the MTJ element, thereby determining whether the MTJ element is in a “1” or “0” bit state. Advantageously, once the switching electrical current has been removed, the magnetic state of the free layer will remain in the switched orientation until some other time when an electrical current is applied to switch the MTJ element to the opposite state. Therefore, the recorded data bit is non-volatile in that it remains intact (the magnetic orientation of the free layer does not change) in the absence of any electrical current being supplied

SUMMARY

According to one embodiment, a method of forming a magnetic memory device includes forming a source region including a first semiconductor material having a first conductivity above a substrate, forming an array of three-dimensional structures above the substrate, depositing a channel material on a surface of at least one sidewall of each three-dimensional structure, depositing a gate dielectric material on the channel material on the surface of at least one sidewall of each three dimensional structure, forming a first isolation region in the cavity region above the substrate, forming a first gate region above the first isolation region in the cavity region, and forming a second isolation region above the first gate region, wherein a n^(th) gate region is formed above a (n+1) isolation region thereafter until a top of the array of three-dimensional structures, wherein each n^(th) gate region is coupled to each n^(th) perpendicular magnetic tunnel junction sensor of each three-dimensional structure.

In addition, forming each three dimensional structure includes forming layers above the source region in an order as follows: a first buffer layer, a dielectric layer, a second buffer layer, a first perpendicular-magnetic tunnel junction sensor, a third buffer layer, a n^(th) perpendicular-magnetic tunnel junction sensor, a (n+2)^(th) buffer layer, and defining an array of three-dimensional structures in the formed layers, wherein each three-dimensional structure comprises a stack of formed layers in a vertical direction above the substrate, wherein each three-dimensional structure has a bottom at the substrate, a top, and a sidewall extending between the bottom and the top, wherein a cavity region is formed between the sidewall of each adjacent three-dimensional structure.

These and other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent to one of skill in the art upon reading of the following detailed description of the embodiments in conjunction with the figures. In the figures, like reference numerals used in more than one figure indicate a like element, and may be considered in light of the description of the like element presented in any of the other figures having the like element.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

For a fuller understanding of the nature and advantages of this invention, as well as the preferred mode of use, reference should be made to the following detailed description read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. The drawings are not presented to scale unless specified otherwise on an individual basis.

FIG. 1 is a schematic representation of a cross-sectional view of a portion of a magnetic memory element, which may be used in embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 2 is a schematic representation of a cross-sectional view of a portion of a magnetic random access memory (MRAM) that includes a magnetoresistive cell, which may be used in embodiments of the invention.

FIG. 3A is a schematic representation of a bird's eye view of a vertical channel of a portion of a MRAM, according to one embodiment.

FIG. 3B is a schematic representation bird's eye view of multiple vertical channels of a portion of a magnetic memory device, according to one embodiment

FIG. 3C a schematic representation of a cross-sectional view of a portion of a MRAM, according to one embodiment.

FIG. 3D is magnified view of Circle 3D from FIG. 3C.

FIG. 3E is magnified view of Circle 3E from FIG. 3C.

FIG. 3F is a top-down view of the magnetic memory device of FIG. 3C, according to one embodiment.

FIG. 4A is a schematic representation of a transistor pattern during a Read Operation of a MRAM, according to one embodiment.

FIG. 4B is a schematic representation of a transistor pattern during a Write Operation of a MRAM, according to one embodiment.

FIG. 5A is a flow chart of a method, in accordance with one embodiment.

FIG. 5B is a continued flowchart from FIG. 5A of a method, in accordance with one embodiment.

FIGS. 6A-6F are schematic representations of the operations of a method, in accordance with one embodiment.

FIGS. 7A-7B are schematic representations of cross-sectional view of a MRAM, according to one embodiment.

FIG. 8 is a flow chart of a method, according to one embodiment.

FIG. 9 is a schematic representation of a method, according to one embodiment.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The following description includes the best embodiments presently contemplated for carrying out the invention. This description is made for the purpose of illustrating the general principles of this invention and is not meant to limit the inventive concepts claimed herein in any way.

According to one general embodiment, a method of forming a magnetic device includes forming a source region including a first semiconductor material having a first conductivity, forming an array of three-dimensional structures above the substrate, depositing a channel material on a surface of at least one sidewall of each three-dimensional structure, depositing a gate dielectric material on the channel material on the surface of at least one sidewall of each three dimensional structure, forming a first isolation region in the cavity region above the substrate, forming a first gate region above the first isolation region in the cavity region, and forming a second isolation region above the first gate region, wherein a n^(th) gate region is formed above a (n+1) isolation region thereafter until a top of the array of three-dimensional structures, wherein each n^(th) gate region is coupled to each n^(th) perpendicular magnetic tunnel junction sensor of each three-dimensional structure.

In addition, forming each three dimensional structure includes forming layers above the source region in an order as follows: a first buffer layer, a dielectric layer, a second buffer layer, a first perpendicular-magnetic tunnel junction sensor, a third buffer layer, a n^(th) perpendicular-magnetic tunnel junction sensor, a (n+2)^(th) buffer layer, and defining an array of three-dimensional structures in the formed layers, wherein each three-dimensional structure comprises a stack of formed layers in a vertical direction above the substrate, wherein each three-dimensional structure has a bottom at the substrate, a top, and a sidewall extending between the bottom and the top, wherein a cavity region is formed between the sidewall of each adjacent three-dimensional structure.

Referring to FIG. 1, a magnetic memory element 100 is shown according to one embodiment. The memory element 100 may be used in a perpendicular magnetic tunnel junction (pMTJ) memory element, as described in various embodiments herein. The memory element 100 may include a magnetic tunnel junction (MTJ) 102 that may include a magnetic reference layer 104, a magnetic free layer 106, and a thin, non-magnetic, electrically-insulating magnetic barrier layer 108 positioned between the reference layer 104 and the free layer 106 in an film thickness direction 140. The barrier layer 108 may include an oxide, such as MgO, Al₂O₃, etc., or some other suitable material known in the art.

The reference layer 104 has a magnetization 110 that is fixed in a direction that is perpendicular to a horizontal plane of the layer, as indicated by the arrow. The horizontal plane is sometimes referred to as a plane of formation in the embodiments described herein. The reference layer 104 may include CoFeB30 or CoFeB40, or some other suitable material known in the art.

The free layer 106 has a magnetization 112 that may be in either of two directions perpendicular to a horizontal plane of the free layer 106, as indicated by the two arrows. The free layer 106 may include CoFeB20/W/CoFeB20, or some other suitable material known in the art. While the magnetization 112 of the free layer 106 remains in either of two directions perpendicular to the plane of the free layer 106 in a quiescent state, it may be selectable switched between these two directions, as is described in greater detail herein. When the magnetization 112 of the free layer 106 is in the same direction as the magnetization 110 of the reference layer 104, the electrical resistance across the MTJ 102 is at a low resistance state. Conversely, when the magnetization 112 of the free layer 106 is opposite to the magnetization 110 of the reference layer 104, the electrical resistance across the MTJ 102 is in a high resistance state.

The reference layer 104 may be part of an anti-parallel magnetic pinning structure 114 that may include a magnetic pinned layer 116 and a non-magnetic, antiparallel coupling layer 118 positioned between the pinned layer 116 and the reference layer 104 in the film thickness direction 140. The antiparallel coupling layer 118 may comprise any suitable material known in the art, such as Ru or a Ru/cobalt stack, and may be constructed to have a thickness that causes ferromagnetic antiparallel coupling of the pinned layer 116 and the reference layer 104. In some approaches, the pinned layer 116 may be a ferromagnetic layer, such as molybdenum (Mo) or cobalt (Co) coupled to reference layer 104 through antiparallel coupling layer 118.

In one approach, the pinned layer 116 may be exchange coupled with an antiferromagnetic layer 120, which may comprise any suitable material known in the art, such as IrMn. In some approaches, the AFM layer may be a series of layers of synthetic anti-ferromagnetic (SAF) materials, for example a SAF seed layer that includes platinum (Pt) and a set of SAF layers comprising alternating cobalt (Co)/Pt.

Exchange coupling between the antiferromagnetic layer 120 and the pinned layer 116 strongly pins the magnetization 122 of the pinned layer 116 in a first direction. The antiparallel coupling between the pinned layer 116 and the reference layer 104 pins the magnetization 110 of the reference layer 104 in a second direction opposite to the direction of magnetization 122 of the pinned layer 116.

According to one approach, a seed layer 124 may be positioned below the pinned layer 116 in the film thickness direction 140 to initiate a desired crystalline structure in the layers deposited thereabove. In one approach, a seed layer 124 may include Ta. In some approaches, an underlayer (not shown) may be positioned above the seed layer. In one approach, an underlayer may include Ru.

In another approach, a capping layer 126 may be positioned above the free layer 106 to protect the underlying layers during manufacture, such as during high temperature annealing. In some approaches, the capping layer 126 may include Ta/Ru, or some suitable material known in the art.

A lower electrode 128 and an upper electrode 130 may be positioned near a bottom and a top of the memory element 100, respectively, in one approach. The lower electrode 128 and the upper electrode 130 may be constructed of a non-magnetic, electrically conductive material of a type known in the art, such as Ru, TaN, Au, Ag, Cu, etc., and may provide an electrical connection with a circuit 132. The circuit 132 may include a current source, and may further include circuitry for reading an electrical resistance across the memory element 100.

The magnetic free layer 106 has a magnetic anisotropy that causes the magnetization 112 of the free layer 106 to remain stable in one of two directions perpendicular to the horizontal plane of the free layer 106. In a write mode of use for the memory element 100, the orientation of the magnetization 112 of the free layer 106 may be switched between these two directions by applying an electrical current through the memory element 100 via the circuit 132. A current in a first direction causes the magnetization 112 of the free layer 106 of the memory element 100 to flip to a first orientation, and a current in a second direction opposite to the first direction causes the magnetization 112 of the free layer 106 of the memory element 100 to flip to a second, opposite direction.

For example, if the magnetization 112 is initially oriented in an upward direction in FIG. 1, applying a current in a downward direction through the memory element 100 causes electrons to flow in an opposite direction upward through the memory element 100. Electrons travelling through the reference layer 104 become spin polarized as a result of the magnetization 110 of the reference layer 104. These spin-polarized electrons cause a spin torque on the magnetization 112 of the free layer 106, which causes the magnetization 112 to flip directions, from the upward direction to a downward direction.

On the other hand, if the magnetization 112 of the free layer 106 is initially in a downward direction in FIG. 1, applying an electrical current through the memory element 100 in an upward direction in FIG. 1 causes electrons to flow in an opposite direction, downward through the memory element 100. However, because the magnetization 112 of the free layer 106 is opposite to the magnetization 110 of the reference layer 104, the electrons will not be able to pass through the barrier layer 108. As a result, the electrons (which have been spin polarized by the magnetization 112 of the free layer 106) will accumulate at the junction between the free layer 106 and the barrier layer 108. This accumulation of spin polarized electrons causes a spin torque that causes the magnetization 112 of the free layer 106 to flip from the downward direction to an upward direction.

In order to assist the switching of the magnetization 112 of the free layer 106, the memory element 100 may include a spin polarization layer 134 positioned above the free layer 106. The spin polarization layer 134 may be separated from the free layer 106 by an exchange coupling layer 136. The spin polarization layer 134 has a magnetic anisotropy that causes it to have a magnetization 138 with a primary component oriented in the in plane direction (e.g., perpendicular to the magnetization 112 of the free layer and the magnetization 110 of the reference layer 104). The magnetization 138 of the spin polarization layer 134 may be fixed in one approach, or may move in a precessional manner as shown in FIG. 1. The magnetization 138 of the spin polarization layer 134 causes a spin torque on the free layer 106 that assists in moving its magnetization 112 away from its quiescent state perpendicular to the plane of the free layer 106. This allows the magnetization 112 of the free layer 106 to more easily flip with less energy being utilized to flip the magnetization 112 in response to applying a write current to the memory element 100.

The memory element 100 described in FIG. 1 is intended to provide context to the various embodiments described herein. The structures and methods described herein in accordance with various embodiments may comprise a portion of the memory element 100 described in FIG. 1 and/or used in conjunction with the memory element 100, in various approaches.

Now referring to FIG. 2, a portion of a magnetic random access memory (MRAM) structure 200 that includes a magnetoresistive cell 202 is shown according to one embodiment. The MRAM structure 200 may be operated and utilized as understood by those of skill in the art, with any special use cases being specified in accordance with an embodiment herein. The memory element 100 described in FIG. 1 may be used as the magnetoresistive cell 202 of FIG. 2 in accordance with embodiments that store data in MRAM. In one embodiment, an MTJ element may be used as the magnetoresistive cell 202.

The MRAM cell 200 also includes a bitline 204 that supplies current across the magnetoresistive sensor stack 202 from a current source 218. The bitline 204 may include any suitable material known in the art, such as TaN, W, TiN, Au, Ag, Cu, etc. An extension layer 206 electrically connects the magnetoresistive sensor stack 202 with the bitline 204. The extension layer 206 may include any suitable material known in the art, such as Ru, Ta, etc. A source terminal 205 is coupled between the magnetoresistive sensor stack 202 and a channel layer 208, the channel layer 208 further being in electrical contact with a n+ layer 210. The channel layer 208 may include any suitable semiconductor material known in the art, such as Si, Ge, GaAs-compounds, etc. The n+ layer 210 may include any suitable material known in the art, such as phosphorous-doped silicon, arsenide-doped silicon, doped silicon cladded with TaN, W, TiN, Au. Ag, Cu, etc., and is electrically connected to the voltage source 218 via a sourceline 212, which may include any suitable material known in the art, such as TaN, W, TiN, Au, Ag, Cu, etc. Positioned across the channel layer 208 is a word line 214 which may include any suitable material known in the art, such as TaN, W, TiN, Au, Ag, Cu, etc. On either side of the n+ layer 210 are shallow trench isolation (STI) layers 216 which provide electrical insulation between adjacent the n+ layer 210. Moreover, although not specifically shown, electrically insulative material may be positioned around the various layers shown in FIG. 2, as would be understood by one of skill in the art.

The development of arrays of three-dimensional (3D) structures that include multiple perpendicular (pMTJ) sensors has provided higher density of non-volatile memory with MRAM. Conventional methods to form the arrays of 3D structures of multiple pMTJ sensors has been challenging due to limitations of processing temperature of pMTJ sensors. Studies of p-MTJ engineering have shown that the p-MTJ structure can only withstand temperatures under 400° C. and duration of processes to not exceed 3 hours. Several degradation processes of the pMTJ sensor structure will occur when the structure is exposed to thermal conditions that exceed 400° C. and/or 3 hours of processes. For example, under these extreme conditions, the 3D structures of pMTJ sensors will experience inter-metallic diffusion along the stack of pMTJ sensors, sidewall etch byproduct diffusion, boron dopant diffusion from free/reference layer pin-hole formation through MgO, etc. Thus, it would be desirable to be able to form an array of 3D structures of stacked pMTJ sensors at lower temperatures and shorter processing times.

Various embodiments described herein present a MRAM device that includes an array of 3D structures in which each 3D structure has alternating pMTJ sensors with ohmic contact layers in a vertical direction. The methodology as described herein to form the array of 3D structures includes simple alternating thin-film deposition. In some approaches, as will be described below, the alternating thin-film deposition may be deposited in a single chamber, thereby resulting in a high yield of wafer production. In sharp contrast, conventional methods of formation of 3D structures for MRAM devices involve multiple chambers for deposition of layers of the 3D structures and thus result in longer production times.

Furthermore, as various embodiments describe herein, a parallel connection of pMTJs and thin film transistor in all vertical levels of each 3D structure may be formed in a single step conformal channel deposition over the pillar shape of the 3D structure. According to various embodiments, the methodology to form an array of 3D structures as described provide a highly efficient process to create high density bit/cell thereby reducing wafer production costs in memory technology.

Thus, as presented below, a plurality of pMTJ may be vertically stacked and etched into long pillar in a single step. Further, the shortened processing time as described will allow cost effective formation of multiple pMTJ devices, with each 3D structure including greater numbers of pMTJ cells. According to one embodiment, a processing method allows alternating deposition of a pMTJ and an inter-pMTJ conducting buffer layer deposition without component element diffusion and structural defects.

Now referring to FIG. 3A, a bird's eye view of a portion of a MRAM structure 300 that includes a vertical 3D structure of multiple stacked pMTJ sensors is shown according to one embodiment. The MRAM structure 300 may be operated and utilized as understood by those of skill in the art, with any special use cases being specified in accordance with an embodiment herein. The memory element 100 described in FIG. 1 may be used as element in FIGS. in accordance with embodiments that store data in MRAM. In one embodiment, an MTJ element may be used as the magnetoresistive cell.

FIG. 3B illustrates a bird's eye view of a larger portion of the magnetic memory device 350 showing a plurality of 3D structures. Each 3D structures 304 a, 304 b may be formed adjacent to each other in the x-direction with multiple gate regions 302 a, 302 b-302 n. Forming a grid array, each 3D structure may also be formed adjacent to each other in the y-direction along an electrode 332 in the y-direction. As shown in FIG. 3A, each gate region 302 n may have gate wordlines 303 parallel at each vertical level.

FIG. 3C represents a schematic drawing of a cross-sectional view of a larger portion of a magnetic memory device 350, according to one embodiment, showing multiple 3D structures 304 a, 304 b-304 n and associated gate regions 302 a, 302 b-302 n. According to various embodiments, a gate region may include one or more gate layers.

Looking back to FIG. 3A, according to one embodiment, the structure 300 is shown as one 3D structure 304 where a sourceline 305/bitline 307 may be in the vertical direction of the 3D structure 304. The gate region 302 a, 302 b-302 n may be positioned orthogonal to the vertical direction of the 3D structure 304 and a sourceline 305/bitline 307. The locations of the sourceline 305/bitline 307 are drawn together as the lines run parallel in the vertical direction of each 3D structure. However, it is important to note that the sourceline 305 is not connected to the bitline 307 within the vertical 3D structure, but may be connected in an associated circuit, as shown later in FIG. 3F. Operation voltage or current may be applied to bitline 307 or sourceline 305 separately. Each gate region 302 a, 302 b-302 n may be coupled to a portion of the 3D structure 304 where a magnetoresistive cell may be positioned. In some approaches, the magnetoresistive cell may be a pMTJ sensor 306, as shown in FIGS. 3A to 3F.

In one embodiment, a 3D structure 304 may include a hardmask layer 310 at the top portion of the 3D structure 304. Along the sidewall of the 3D structure 304 may be channel material 308 with a gate dielectric material 312 that couples the gate region 302 a, 302 b-302 n with the 3D structure 304. In some approaches, the 3D structure 304 may include silicon.

According to one embodiment, a magnetic device includes a substrate having a source region with a first conductivity. Looking to the drawing in FIG. 3C, the array of 3D structures 304 a, 304 b-304 n may be positioned in a vertical direction above a substrate 318 that includes a source region 320. In some approaches, the substrate 318 includes a semiconductor material, for example, silicon. In some approaches, the source region may have a n+ type conductivity. In other approaches, the conductivity of the source region may be a metal.

According to one embodiment, each 3D structure includes a series of layers stacked in a vertical direction, wherein the vertical direction is a z-direction orthogonal to an xy plane of the substrate. Each 3D structure may include dielectric layer positioned above the substrate, a plurality of a set of magnetic tunnel junction layers positioned above the dielectric layer, and a buffer layer positioned in between each set of magnetic tunnel junction layers thereof.

Each 3D structure may include a channel material on a surface of at least one sidewall of each 3D structure and a gate dielectric material positioned on the channel material on the surface of at least one sidewall of each 3D structure.

Looking to FIGS. 3A-3B, each 3D structure 304 a, 304 b-304 n may be a pillar. In preferred approaches, each 3D structure may be a cylindrical pillar. In various approaches, a 3D structure 304 a, 304 b-304 n may include a dielectric layer 316 positioned above the substrate 318 and below the first pMTJ sensor 306. In some approaches for optimal memory operation, the 3D structure of stacked pMTJ sensors 306 may be isolated from the source region 320 (source-line) with a dielectric layer 316 therebetween. Thus, the portion of each 3D structure 304 a, 304 b-304 n including the buffer layer 314 and the dielectric layer 316 may be isolated from source region 320 (sourceline) by a sourceline selector transistor, as shown in FIG. 3E. A source line transistor ma form a source line channel 363 (dashed line).

Each 3D structure 304 a, 304 b-304 n may have a plurality of pMTJ sensors 306. For example, but not meant to be limiting, each vertical channel may include stacks of pMTJ sensor 306 in multiples of 4, 8, 16, etc.

In one approach, a pMTJ sensor 306 may include the following layers: a seed layer, an underlayer, a synthetic antiferromagnetic seed layer, a synthetic antiferromagnetic layer, an antiferromagnetic coupling layer, a ferromagnetic coupling layer, a reference layer, a barrier layer, a free layer, and a capping layer. In some approaches, each layer may include multiple layers. It is important to note that the layers of the pMTJ sensor 306 as disclosed herein serve only as an example and are not limiting in any way, as various embodiments may include additional or less layers to form a pMTJ sensor. In some approaches the bottom layer (e.g. bottom electrode, seed layer, etc.) and/or top layer (e.g. upper electrode, capping layer, etc.) of each pMTJ sensor may include TaN.

In one embodiment, each 3D structure 304 a, 304 b-304 n may include a buffer layer 314 positioned above and below each pMTJ sensor 306 stack. In some approaches, the buffer layer 314 may be conductive. In some approaches, the buffer layer 314 may include a metallic material. For example, but not meant to be limiting, the buffer layer 314 may include Ni, Au, Pt, Al, or a combination thereof. In some approaches, the buffer layer 314 may include an intermetallic layer. For example, but not meant to be limiting, the buffer layer 314 may include Ni/Au, Ti/Al, Ta/Au, or a combination thereof.

The upper layer of each 3D structure may include a hardmask layer 310. In some approaches, the hard mask layer 310 may include one of the following TaN, TiN, or a combination thereof.

In some embodiments, the 3D structure 304 a, 304 b-304 n may include a channel material 308 on a surface of at least one sidewall 309 of each 3D structure. In some approaches, the channel material 308 may include InZnO₂, ZnO, InZnGaO, or a combination thereof.

In addition, the 3D structure 304 a, 304 b-304 n may include a gate dielectric material 312 on the channel material 308 on the surface of at least one sidewall 309 of each 3D structure. In some approaches, the gate dielectric material 312 may include SiO₂, ZrO₂, HfO₂, Al₂O₃, or a combination thereof.

In an exemplary approach, the buffer layer 314 of the 3D structure forms a low barrier Schottky contact with the channel material 308 on the sidewall 309 of the 3D structure. Preferably, the buffer layer 314 forms an ohmic contact with the channel material 308 on the sidewall 309 of the 3D structure.

In one embodiment, as depicted in FIG. 3C, each 3D structure 304 a, 304 b-304 n may have a bottom at the surface of the substrate 318, a top at the top layer of a hardmask layer 310, and a sidewall 309 extending between the bottom and the top, wherein a gate region 302 a, 302 b-302 n of each vertical level a-n may extend across a cavity region 311 between at least one sidewall 309 of each adjacent 3D structure 304 a, 304 b-304 n in an x-direction, wherein the x direction is orthogonal to a y-direction in the xy plane. The gate region 302 a, 302 b-302 n may be coupled to at least one sidewall 309 of each 3D structure 304 a, 304 b-304 n in the x-direction.

According to one embodiment, each gate region 302 a, 302 b-302 n may be coupled to the gate dielectric material 312 of each 3D structure 304 a, 304 b-304 n.

As shown for the 3D structure 304 n in FIG. 3C, each vertical level of a gate region 302 a-n may form a gate wordline 303 a-n that may serve as gate electrodes of the transistor, according to one embodiment. For example, a gate region 302 a represents the gate region in the 1^(st) vertical level of the 3D structure 304 a, 304 b-304 n. The gate region 302 x represents the gate region of the dielectric layer 316 of the 3D structures 304 a, 304 b-304 n.

Looking back to FIG. 3A, a sourceline 305/bitline 307 may be a vertical channel of each 3D structure 304 a, 304 b-304 n. The gate wordline 303 n functions in each gate region 302 n, such that the gate wordline 303 n is orthogonal to the sourceline 305/bitline 307.

Looking to inset FIG. 3D from the Circle 3D of FIG. 3C, a cross-section of a thin film transistor channels are shown. FIG. 3D illustrates a portion of each 3D structure 304 a, 304 b-304 n at a buffer layer 314 and a pMTJ sensor 306 at certain vertical level in certain gate bias configurations. In one approach, a transistor channel may be formed by touching channel material 308 with gate region 302 a. In exemplary embodiments, a wordline channel layer may be formed at points where the gate region 302 a is touching the gate dielectric material 312 that is positioned along the channel material 308 at the sidewall 309 of the pMTJ sensor 306 in the 3D structure 304 a, 304 b. In instances when the voltage of the wordline is high, the transistor channel is turned on, and thus a bypass channel 360 (small dash line). In such a case, the pMTJ sensor 306 is not included in the channel.

In another approach, when the voltage of the wordline is low, the transistor channel is turned off, and thus a pMTJ channel 362 (large dash line) may be formed. In such a case the pMTJ sensor 306 is included in the channel.

In some approaches, the bypass channel 360 in every vertical level of the 3D structures 304 a, 304 b-304 n and gate region 302 a, 302 b-302 n may have a source contact and a drain contact formed by the ohmic contact material of the buffer layer 314. In other approaches, the pMTJ channel 362 in every vertical level of the 3D structures 304 a, 304 b-304 n and gate region 302 a, 302 b-302 n may have a source contact and a drain contact formed by the ohmic contact material of the buffer layer 314. In various approaches, the source contact and drain contact may be interchangeable in the symmetric transistor. For example, whenever one terminal has higher electrical potential than the other, the higher potential terminal may be regarded as a drain. In one approach, under a particular bias condition, a drain terminal of a lower level channel may also be viewed as a source terminal of one level higher channel in which the metal in the buffer layer may be bridging two channels in the adjacent vertical level.

In one embodiment, each gate region 302 a, 302 b-302 n may include a second semiconductor material having a second conductivity. In some approaches, the semiconductor material of the gate region 302 a, 302 b-302 n may be the same or different as the semiconductor material of the source region 320. In some approaches, the conductivity of the gate region 302 a, 302 b-302 n may be a n-type conductivity. In other approaches, the conductivity of the gate region 302 a, 302 b-302 n may be a metal. Further, the conductivity of the semiconductor material of the gate region 302 a, 302 b-302 n may be the same or different than the conductivity of the semiconductor material of the source region 320.

In some approaches, the semiconductor material of the gate material of the gate region 302 a, 302 b-302 n may be the same or different from the semiconductor material of the source region 320. In some approaches, the gate material of the gate layer may include W, TiNi, TaN, TiN, and Ti.

In one embodiment, the gate region may have an isolation region above and below the gate region. In some approaches, the isolation region may include a semiconductor material. In some approaches, the isolation material may be the same or different as the semiconductor material of the substrate.

FIG. 3F illustrates a top down view of a magnetic memory device 350 including a portion of an array of the 3D structures 304 having cavity regions 311 there between, according to one embodiment. In some approaches, the 3D structures 304 may be arranged in a hexagonally close packed (HCP) array, a square array, or arranged in any other suitable configuration as would become apparent to one skilled in the art upon reading the present disclosure.

Looking to FIG. 3F, in an exemplary approach, the 3D structures may be formed at a distance d in the y-direction in order to prevent a wordline bridge from forming between adjacent 3D structures in the y-direction. If two 3D structures are formed too close together in the y-direction, than the gate wordlines of the parallel gate regions in the y-direction between each 3D structure may bridge thereby forming a wordline bridge.

As particularly shown in FIG. 3F, the isolation region 330 may be present in a portion of the cavity region 311 (see FIG. 3C) between the 3D structures 304. In various approaches, the isolation region 330 present in the cavity regions 311 may extend the full distance between adjacent 3D structures 304 such that the isolation region 330 is in contact with both adjacent structures.

As evident from FIG. 3F, the sourceline 305 a, 305 b and bitline 307 a, 307 b of each 3D structure 304 may be connected to a sourceline/bitline circuit 364 via source wires or a continuous plane of metal (a source metal layer). A sourceline/bitline circuit 364, as shown in the expanded view, may have multiple pairs of sense amplifier 370 and bias generation block 372 per bitline 307 a, 307 b and sourceline 305 a, 305 b. The sense amplifier 370 and bias generation block 372 may be muxed 368 so that either sense amplifier or bias generation block may be activated depending on the target operation (e.g. program operation, read operation, etc.). Each bitline 307 a, 307 b may be connecting plurals of a drain terminal (e.g. the top portion of pMTJ) of transistors positioned in the direction of running bitline 307 a, 307 b. Each sourceline 305 a, 305 b may be connecting plurals of a source terminal of multiple transistors in the direction of sourceline 305 a, 305 b. Moreover, each wordline 303 a, 303 b may connect the gate electrode of plurals of transistors in the row direction.

In some approaches, each 3D structure 304 in a single column along an electrode 332 in a y-direction may be connected by a sourceline 305 or bitline 307 for each 3D structure. As also evident from FIG. 3F, the gate regions 302 may surround each of the 3D structures 304 and be connected to one another and to a wordline driver circuit 366 via gate wires or a continuous plane of metal (a gate metal layer). As shown in the expanded view of the wordline driver circuit 366, the voltage/current for wordlines may be generated and selectively activated based on target address in the memory array.

For a magnetic memory device 350, there will be n-wordlines per row because of vertical stacking, for example wordline 303 a indicates a wordline in the first row at the 1^(st) vertical level, wordline 303 b indicates a wordline in the first row at the 2^(nd) vertical level, and at the top, wordline 303 n indicates a wordline in the first row at the n^(th) vertical level. Further, wordline 333 a indicates a wordline in the second row at the 1^(st) vertical level, wordline 333 b indicates a wordline in the second row at the 2^(nd) vertical level wordline, and 333 n indicates a wordline in the second row at the n^(th) vertical level.

As shown in the wordline driver circuit 366, a bias generation block 376 may generate bypassing wordline voltage and GND. A demux 374 in the gate driver may be designed so that unselected wordlines may be automatically biased with bypassing wordline voltage from bias generation block 376. In some approaches, a selected wordline may be biased to GND by demux 374 block.

In some approaches, each 3D structure in a single row of a gate region 302 in an x-direction may be connected by a wordline 303 of the gate region 302.

According to various embodiments, the magnetic memory device 350 as described herein may 4F² to 6F² architecture such that a memory cell functions at each and every possible location, that being each and every crossing of a wordline and a bitline.

FIGS. 4A and 4B show examples of a sourceline/bitline map of the magnetic device during a Read Operation and a Write Operation, respectively, according to one embodiment. A memory operation, including writing information, erasing information, and reading information includes mechanisms of selectively selecting target physical memory cells which may be physically located in different vertical levels. Therefore, various embodiments described herein demonstrate a legitimate memory operation (e.g. writing, erasing, and reading) on all physical memory cells. A plurality of vertical channels may be connected by a pair of a sourceline 405 and a bitline 407 in the direction of the pair may be run. Wordline 403 may be running in an orthogonal directional to pairs of a bitline 407 and a sourceline 405, thereby allowing a capability of selecting physical memory cells at each and every intersection of wordline 403 and pairs of a bitline 407 and a sourceline 405. Moreover, a plurality of wordlines 403 may be formed in the vertical direction. In a preferred embodiment, physical memory cells located at only one vertical level may be activated per memory operation without disturbing state of memory cell in other vertical levels. By applying bypassing signals on all unselected wordlines, thin film transistor channels may be turned on and subsequently forming bypassing channels all the way to the target memory cell. The bypassing channels may be programmatically configurable conducting channel along vertical channel in a way that voltage and current biasing applied by bitline or sourceline may be directed only to target memory cells.

As shown in the Read Operation of FIG. 4A, sourcelines 405 may be biased at read voltage, V_(rd), by a circuit 464. This read bias may be applied across target pMTJ. Read current determined mainly by resistance state of selected pMTJ cell may be picked up by bitlines 407 and eventually delivered to the circuits 464. Therefore, in this operation, sourceline 405 may be connected by bias generation block 472 in the circuit 464 whereas bitlines 407 may be connected to sense amplifier 470 in the circuit 464.

As shown in the Write Operation of FIG. 4B, State ‘1’ (high-resistance state) may be written into pMTJ if current flow through pMTJ upward whereas state ‘0’ (low-resistance state) may be written into pMTJ if current flow through pMTJ downward. In this bias configuration, bit sequence of ‘010’ may be written into the first vertical level pMTJ in the first, second, third pillar.

Now referring to FIGS. 5A-5B a method 500 for forming a magnetic device is shown according to one embodiment. The method 500 may be performed in accordance with the present invention in any of the environments depicted in FIGS. 1-4, among others not specifically described, in various approaches. Of course, more or less operations than those specifically described in FIGS. 5A-5B may be included in method 500, as would be understood by one of skill in the art upon reading the present descriptions.

Looking to FIG. 5A, method 500 may begin with operation 502. Operation 502 includes forming a source region above a substrate, the source region comprising a first semiconductor material having a first conductivity. In some approaches, where the first conductivity may have an n-type conductivity. In other approaches, where the first conductivity may be a metal.

Operation 504 includes forming an array of three-dimensional structures above the substrate. Operation 504 involves a two sub-operations, 504 a and 504 b as described below.

Operation 504 a involves forming layers above the source region in an order as follows: a first buffer layer, a dielectric layer, a second buffer layer, a first perpendicular-magnetic tunnel junction sensor, a third buffer layer, a n^(th) perpendicular-magnetic tunnel junction sensor, a (n+2)^(th) buffer layer. In various approaches, forming of the pMTJ sensors may include deposition of the following layers: a seed layer, an underlayer, a synthetic antiferromagnetic seed layer, a synthetic antiferromagnetic layer, an antiferromagnetic coupling layer, a ferromagnetic coupling layer, a reference layer, a barrier layer, a free layer, and capping layer. In one embodiment, materials that comprise a pMTJ stack may be deposited in a single physical vapor deposition (PVD) chamber with several different target materials, for example Mo, Ru, Mg, Ta, Co, Fe, B, etc.

In one approach, operation 504 a of forming the layers of the 3D structures includes thin-film deposition may involve atomic layer deposition in a single chamber at room temperature. In another approach, operation 504 a of forming the layers of the 3D structures includes thin-film deposition may involve plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition, preferably in a single chamber at room temperature. In exemplary approaches, the deposition of pMTJ sensor stacks may not heat the substrate inside the deposition chamber while deposition occurs. Thus, preferably, the temperature of deposition may remain below 100° C. while pMTJ sensor stack layers are being deposited.

According to various approaches of operation 504 a, the dielectric layer formed above the substrate may include SiO₂, Si₃N₄, HfO₂, Al₂O₃, etc.

Forming a buffer layer involves depositing the buffer layer above each pMTJ sensor stack so that the layers of buffer and pMTJ sensor alternate in a vertical direction. In various approaches, the buffer layers include ohmic contact material that extends in the vertical direction and may include TaN, TiN, W, Ru. etc. The layers of buffer layer may be the same or different within each 3D structure. The ohmic contact material of the buffer layer may be deposited on the pMTJ sensor stack layers using methods known by one skilled in the art including evaporator, sputter, etc. Notably, deposition of the buffer layer may be done at room temperature, thereby maintaining a low temperature environment during operation 504 a. Thus, the alternate deposition of pMTJ sensor stack layers and ohmic contact material of the buffer layer may maintain the integrity of the pMTJ sensors.

In some approaches, the buffer layer may be an inter-pMTJ conducting buffer layer. In an exemplary approach, the buffer layer may be selected to have small Schottky barrier (preferably, ohmic contact) with the channel material of the 3D structure (as described below). A small Schottky barrier may serve as a shorting channel between two adjacent pMTJ sensor layers in case a specific pMTJ sensor in a vertical stack is not selected for any write/read operation.

Exemplary ohmic contact material, such as Ni—Au, Ti—Al, Ta—Au, etc., may demonstrate ohmic contact behavior with targeted channel materials.

The top layer (e.g. final layer) formed above the substrate during operation 504 a may be a hardmask layer of the uppermost pMTJ sensor stack. In one approach, the hardmask material may be TaN, TiN. In various approaches, the hardmask material of the top layer may be deposited on the layers above the substrate using low temperature processes (e.g. below 400° C.) for example, low-pressure chemical-vapor deposition (LPCVD), sputter, evaporator, metal oxide chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD), atomic layer deposition (ALD), etc. In preferred approaches, the hardmask material may be deposited using ALD at lower temperature.

When all the desired layers for the magnetic device are formed, operation 504 b involves defining an array of three-dimensional structures in the formed layers, wherein each three-dimensional structure comprises a stack of formed layers in a vertical direction above the substrate. A vertical direction may be defined as the z-direction orthogonal to an xy plane of the substrate. Further, each 3D structure has a bottom at the substrate, a top, and a sidewall extending between the bottom and the top, where a cavity region may be formed between the sidewall of each adjacent 3D structure. In one approach, operation 504 b of defining an array of 3D structures of the formed layers may involve wet chemical etching. In another approach, operation 504 b of defining an array of 3D structures of the formed layers may involve ion beam etching. In yet another approach, operation 504 b of defining an array of 3D structures of the formed layers may involve plasma etching.

Operation 506 includes depositing a channel material on a surface of a least one sidewall of each 3D structure. In various approaches, the channel material may be one or more of the following channel materials: ZnO₂, InZnO₂, InZnGaO, etc. Operation 506 involves depositing the channel material at a lower temperature where the channel material may be in an amorphous phase. Preferably, the channel material may be in an amorphous phase rather than a polycrystalline phase in order to allow for uniform distribution of carrier mobility offered by an amorphous phase without suffering from reduced mobility from the amorphous phase. For example, amorphous ZnO₂ has a big s-orbital that allows s-orbital overlaps between adjacent atoms, thereby maintaining high mobility in an amorphous phase. Deposition of the channel material may include thermal/e-beam evaporator, radio frequency (RF) magnetron sputtering, MOCVD, ALD, etc.

Operation 508 involves depositing a gate dielectric material on the channel material on the surface of at least one sidewall of each 3D structure, thereby forming a thin-film transistor. The dielectric material may include, preferably, HfO₂, ZrO₂, HfO_(x), Al₂O₃, etc. Deposition of the gate dielectric material may occur at low temperature, in a range of about 200° C. to about 250° C.

Looking to FIG. 5B, operation 510 involves forming a first isolation region in the cavity region above the substrate.

Operation 512 involves forming a first gate region above the first isolation region in the cavity region.

Operation 514 involves forming a second isolation region above the first gate region, where a n^(th) gate region is formed above a (n+1) isolation region thereafter until a top of the array of 3D structures. The pMTJ at the top position of each 3D structure is the n^(th) vertical level of 3D structure. The vertical levels of the 3D structure may be defined as 1≤k≤n, wherein 1 is the first vertical level above the substrate and n is the uppermost (e.g. top) vertical level of the each 3D structure, and k^(th) vertical level is a level in between 1 and n. In various approaches, k^(th) gate region may be coupled to each k^(th) pMTJ sensor of each 3D structure.

In some approaches, the isolation region may be initially deposited as a sacrificial layer, for example, the isolation region may include SiGe. In a following operation, the sacrificed SiGe of the isolation region may be replaced with silicon dioxide. In exemplary approaches, the isolation region may be silicon dioxide when the gate region is doped silicon.

In other approaches, the isolation region may be silicon. In exemplary approaches, the isolation region may be undoped silicon when the gate region includes a metal.

In some approaches, the gate region may be different from the semiconductor material of the source region. In another approach, the semiconductor material of each gate region may be the same as the semiconductor material of the source region.

In some approaches, the gate region may include at least one metal material, for example, W, TaN, TiN, Ru, etc.

In some approaches, each gate region may be coupled to the gate dielectric material on a surface of a sidewall of a pMTJ of each 3D structure.

In an exemplary approach, operations 510, 512, and 514 involve bottom-up processes (e.g., processes involving growing the structure). Examples of bottom up process may include epitaxial silicon growth of gate region material alternating with material for isolation region. The process described herein allows epitaxy growth of the gate region and alternating isolation region from the bottom, starting on the surface of the substrate, to the top of the array of 3D structures. Further, preferably, the semiconductor material of the alternating gate layers may be formed by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) at low temperatures to generate a low crystallinity of the semiconductor material, for example silicon with low crystallinity. Thus, the lower temperatures allow for preservation of the tall morphology of the pMTJ sensor stacks in the 3D structures and the integrity of the pMTJ sensors.

Method 600 as illustrated in FIGS. 6A-6F is an embodiment of method 500 for forming a magnetic device. The method 600 may be performed in accordance with the present invention in any of the environments depicted in FIGS. 1-5B, among others not specifically described, in various approaches. Of course, more or less operations than those specifically described in FIGS. 5A-6F may be included in method 600, as would be understood by one of skill in the art upon reading the present descriptions.

FIG. 6A is an illustration of two operations 502, 504 a of method 500, according to one embodiment. Method 600 shows forming a layer 620 including a first semiconductor material above a substrate 618, wherein the first semiconductor material having n-type conductivity.

As described above for operation 504 a, an array of 3D structures may be formed by depositing layers above the substrate 618 in an order as follows: a first buffer layer 614, a dielectric layer 616, a buffer layer 614, a first pMTJ sensor 606, a third buffer layer 614, where the pMTJ sensor 606 layers are deposited alternately with the buffer layers 614. The uppermost layer of the layers may be a hardmask layer 610.

FIG. 6B is an illustration of operation 504 b of method 500. As shown, an array of 3D structures 604 may be defined in formed layers. Each 3D structure 604 may be a stack of formed layers in the vertical V direction above the substrate 618.

FIG. 6C is an illustration of operations 506 and 508 of method 500, according to one embodiment. As shown a channel material 608 may be deposited on the surface of at least one sidewall 609 of each 3D structure 604. A gate dielectric material 612 may be deposited on the channel material on the surface of at least one sidewall 609 of each 3D structure 604.

FIG. 6D is an illustration of operation 510 of method 500, according to one embodiment. A plurality of layers in the cavity region 611 above the substrate 618 may be formed. The layers may be formed orthogonal to the vertical direction of each 3D structure. The layers are formed in alternate above the substrate as follows: a layer of isolation region, a layer of gate region. In some approaches, the isolation region may be temporary and include a sacrificial semiconductor material. In some approaches, the gate region may include a semiconductor material with a conductivity, for example, a n-type conductivity. For example, the layer of temporary isolation region 630 may be a sacrificial material such as SiGe and the layer of gate region 602 may be doped-Si. The layers may be deposited with the first layer of the temporary isolation region 630 of SiGe deposited onto the substrate by epitaxy deposition by gas flow. A gate region 602 of doped-Si may be deposited on the first layer of a temporary isolation region 630 of SiGe by epitaxy deposition. Then following, the temporary isolation region 630 may initially include sacrificial material such as SiGe deposited on a layer of the gate region, and so the layers are deposited in an alternative manner.

In some approaches, a thickness of each k^(th) gate region may be at least a thickness of each k^(th) pMTJ sensor of each 3D structure. For example, as illustrated in FIG. 6D, the thickness of the gate layer th_(g) may be defined by at least the thickness of the pMTJ sensor stack th_(mtj). Further, the location of the gate region may be adjacent to each pMTJ sensor stack of each 3D structure. In some approaches, each k^(th) gate region may be coupled to the k^(th) pMTJ of each 3D structure in an x-direction of the array of 3D structures. The formation of the plurality of alternating layers may be deposited in a single chamber with alternating gas correlating to the layer to be deposited.

FIG. 6E is an illustration of the formation of the isolation region, according to one embodiment. In some approaches, the temporary isolation region 630 may be formed of sacrificial material, for example SiGe, and may be removed from the device by etching, etc. thereby leaving only the gate region 602 formed across the 3D structure 604.

FIG. 6F is an illustration the formation of the functional isolation region 632, according to one embodiment. Layers of metal oxide, semiconductor material, etc., may be formed in the space defined above and below the gate region 602 in the cavity region 611 between the 3D structure 604. For example SiO₂ may be formed in the space defined above and below the gate region 602.

In one approach as depicted in FIG. 7A, a method 700 to form a 3D structure above a substrate following back end of line (BEOL) processes at the kth level of a magnetic device, a layer 735 may be formed by patterning hardmask material 740, for example TaN, and a semiconductor material 742, for example amorphous silicon. For example, the silicon may be crystallized using metal-induced crystallization.

As illustrated in FIG. 7B, according to one embodiment as described herein, an nth level of a magnetic device including each 3D structure 704 formed with buffer layers 714 alternating with pMTJ sensor 706 stacks, and a dielectric layer 716 above the substrate, and a hardmask layer 710 formed at the top of the 3D structure 704. According to one embodiment, the gate regions 702 may be formed across the 3D structures at the location of the pMTJ sensor 706 stacks of each 3D structure and the layer 732 of SiO₂ above and below the gate region 702. According to method 700, using the same techniques as described herein, poly-gate and oxide layers may be grown in alternate.

Now referring to FIG. 8 a method 800 for forming a substrate for BEOL processes of forming a magnetic memory device, according to one embodiment. The method 800 may be performed in accordance with the present invention in any of the environments depicted in FIGS. 1-7, among others not specifically described, in various approaches. Of course, more or less operations than those specifically described in FIG. 8 may be included in method 800, as would be understood by one of skill in the art upon reading the present descriptions.

Method 800 describes an embodiment for forming a substrate to be used for BEOL formation of a magnetic memory device as described herein. Operation 802 of method 800 includes recessing a portion between each k^(th) level source region having a first conductivity of a substrate. The k^(th) level source region may be defined as a source region in between a first source region of a first array of 3D structures and a n^(th) level source region, e.g. at the top position of the magnetic memory device having multiple arrays of 3D structures. At the top position of each 3D structure is the n^(th) vertical level of 3D structure. In some approaches, the k^(th) level source region may be formed by dual-damascene BEOL processes using conventional techniques. The k^(th) level source region may include k^(th) level metal, for example, but not limited to, TaN, W, TiW, Cu, etc.

The portion of the substrate positioned between the k^(th) level source region in the xy plane of the substrate may include silicon oxide. In some approaches, operation 802 may involve recessing the silicon dioxide from the surface of the k^(th) level source region to a level below the surface of the metal source region.

Operation 804 includes forming a layer of silicon material above the substrate, where the silicon material may be amorphous.

Operation 806 includes depositing an oxide material above the layer of silicon material.

Operation 808 includes planarizing a surface of the substrate to each k^(th) level source region. In some approaches, planarizing the surface of the substrate that includes oxide material on a layer of amorphous silicon material to the surface of the metal of the k^(th) level source may involve chemical mechanical planarization (CMP) techniques.

Operation 810 includes annealing a surface of the substrate, where the surface of the substrate may have portions of k^(th) level source region having metal alternating with portions of silicon. Methods to anneal the surface may include laser annealing the surface to generate a single crystalline silicon structure on the surface of the substrate.

Following completion of method 800, the formed substrate may be used to form an array of 3D structures following a method described herein (see FIGS. 5A and 5B).

FIG. 9 illustrates a schematic representation of method 800, according to one embodiment. The substrate 900 includes portions of k^(th) level source region 920 having a first conductivity, including a metal, for example TaN, W, TiW, Cu, etc. The k^(th) level source region 920 may be connected to the k^(th) level via a level connector 924. The level connector 924 may include metal, for example, W, Cu, etc. The substrate 900 includes portions of silicon dioxide 922 between the n^(th) level source region 920.

Operation 902, as shown in FIG. 9, includes recessing the portions of silicon dioxide 922 in the wordline direction to below the surface of the k^(th) level source region 920.

Operation 904 includes depositing amorphous/poly-phase silicon 926 with polygrains above the recessed portions of silicon dioxide 922 and the surface of k^(th) level source region 920.

Operation 908 includes planarizing the substrate following oxide deposition. Using conventional techniques such as CMP the upper surface of the substrate may be planarized to the upper surface of the k^(th) level source region 920, thereby providing a substantially flat surface of the substrate having portions of amorphous/poly-phase silicon 926 and k^(th) level source region 920.

Operation 910 includes annealing the surface of the substrate by laser annealing techniques to form a single-crystalline silicon 928 above the portions of amorphous/poly-phase silicon 926 and k^(th) level source region 920.

While various embodiments have been described above, it should be understood that they have been presented by way of example only and not limitation. Other embodiments falling within the scope of the invention may also become apparent to those skilled in the art. Thus, the breadth and scope of the invention should not be limited by any of the above-described exemplary embodiments, but should be defined only in accordance with the following claims and their equivalents. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A method of forming a magnetic memory device, the method comprising: forming a source region above a substrate, the source region comprising a first semiconductor material having a first conductivity; forming an array of three-dimensional structures above the substrate, wherein the forming comprises: forming layers above the source region in an order as follows: a first buffer layer, a dielectric layer, a second buffer layer, a first perpendicular-magnetic tunnel junction sensor, a third buffer layer, a n^(th) perpendicular-magnetic tunnel junction sensor, a (n+2)^(th) buffer layer; and defining an array of three-dimensional structures in the formed layers, wherein each three-dimensional structure comprises a stack of formed layers in a vertical direction above the substrate, wherein each three-dimensional structure has a bottom at the substrate, a top, and a sidewall extending between the bottom and the top, wherein a cavity region is formed between the sidewall of each adjacent three-dimensional structure; depositing a channel material on a surface of at least one sidewall of each three-dimensional structure; depositing a gate dielectric material on the channel material on the surface of at least one sidewall of each three dimensional structure; forming a first isolation region in the cavity region above the substrate; forming a first gate region above the first isolation region in the cavity region; and forming a second isolation region above the first gate region, wherein a n^(th) gate region is formed above a (n+1) isolation region thereafter until a top of the array of three-dimensional structures, wherein each n^(th) gate region is coupled to each n^(th) perpendicular magnetic tunnel junction sensor of each three-dimensional structure.
 2. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein the first conductivity of the semiconductor material of each source region is a metal.
 3. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein the first conductivity of the semiconductor material of each source region is a n-type conductivity.
 4. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein the n^(th) layers of a perpendicular-magnetic junction sensor comprises: a seed layer; an underlayer; a synthetic antiferromagnetic seed layer; a synthetic antiferromagnetic layer an antiferromagnetic coupling layer; a ferromagnetic coupling layer; a reference layer; a barrier layer; a free layer; and a capping layer.
 5. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein a thickness of each n^(th) gate region is at least a thickness of each n^(th) perpendicular magnetic tunnel junctions sensor of each three-dimensional structure.
 6. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein the dielectric layer is selected from a group consisting of: SiO₂, Si₃N₄, HfO₂, or Al₂O₃.
 7. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein each buffer layer is selected from the group consisting of: TaN, TiN, W, and Ru.
 8. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein each gate region comprises a second semiconductor material having a second conductivity.
 9. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein each gate region comprises at least one metal material selected from the group consisting of: W, TaN, TiN, and Ru.
 10. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein forming the layers of the three-dimensional structures includes thin-film deposition using at least one of: atomic layer deposition and plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition.
 11. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein a final layer formed above the substrate is a hardmask layer.
 12. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein defining the array of three-dimensional structures includes at least one of: wet chemical etching, ion beam etching, and plasma etching.
 13. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein depositing the channel material includes at least one of: thermal/e-beam evaporator, radio frequency magnetron sputtering, metal oxide chemical vapor deposition, and atomic layer deposition.
 14. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein depositing the gate dielectric material includes atomic layer deposition.
 15. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein each gate region is coupled to at least one sidewall of adjacent three dimensional structures.
 16. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein each n^(th) gate region is coupled to the n^(th) perpendicular magnetic tunnel junction sensor of each three-dimensional structure in an x-direction of the array of three-dimensional structures.
 17. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein each three dimensional structure in a single column in a y-direction is a connected by a sourceline/bitline.
 18. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein each three-dimensional structure in a single row in an x-direction is connected by a wordline of each gate region.
 19. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein forming each gate region alternately with each isolation region includes bottom up processes.
 20. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein the isolation region may include silicon dioxide.
 21. A method as recited in claim 1, wherein the array of three-dimensional structures may be formed on a substrate using for back-end-of-line processes.
 22. A method as recited in claim 21, wherein a method for forming the substrate comprises: recessing a portion between each k^(th) level source region having a first conductivity of a substrate; forming a layer of silicon material above the substrate, wherein the layer of silicon material is amorphous; depositing an oxide material above the layer of silicon material; planarizing a surface of the substrate to each k^(th) level source region; and annealing a surface of the substrate.
 23. A method as recited in claim 22 wherein the portion recessed is silicon dioxide.
 24. A method as recited in claim 22, wherein the surface of the substrate has a single crystalline silicon structure. 